Chinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

"At the farthest end of the Great Wall, Yang Yongfu limps along the section he arduously restored, in effect 'privatising' it and putting himself on a collision course with the authorities. The farmer spent five million yuan ($800,000) and years of backbreaking work renovating several hundred metres of the national symbol deep in northwestern China, turning it into a tourist site. He set up an entrance area for tourists, complete with a car park and fishpond, and his wife Tao Huiping collects the 25 yuan admittance fee at the ticket booth — a table in the open air. A 2006 law gave the government the exclusive right to manage national relics — making Yang’s project illegal." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

Chinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

"At the farthest end of the Great Wall, Yang Yongfu limps along the section he arduously restored, in effect 'privatising' it and putting himself on a collision course with the authorities. The farmer spent five million yuan ($800,000) and years of backbreaking work renovating several hundred metres of the national symbol deep in northwestern China, turning it into a tourist site. He set up an entrance area for tourists, complete with a car park and fishpond, and his wife Tao Huiping collects the 25 yuan admittance fee at the ticket booth — a table in the open air. A 2006 law gave the government the exclusive right to manage national relics — making Yang’s project illegal." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

Chinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

"At the farthest end of the Great Wall, Yang Yongfu limps along the section he arduously restored, in effect 'privatising' it and putting himself on a collision course with the authorities. The farmer spent five million yuan ($800,000) and years of backbreaking work renovating several hundred metres of the national symbol deep in northwestern China, turning it into a tourist site. He set up an entrance area for tourists, complete with a car park and fishpond, and his wife Tao Huiping collects the 25 yuan admittance fee at the ticket booth — a table in the open air. A 2006 law gave the government the exclusive right to manage national relics — making Yang’s project illegal." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

Chinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

"At the farthest end of the Great Wall, Yang Yongfu limps along the section he arduously restored, in effect 'privatising' it and putting himself on a collision course with the authorities. The farmer spent five million yuan ($800,000) and years of backbreaking work renovating several hundred metres of the national symbol deep in northwestern China, turning it into a tourist site. He set up an entrance area for tourists, complete with a car park and fishpond, and his wife Tao Huiping collects the 25 yuan admittance fee at the ticket booth — a table in the open air. A 2006 law gave the government the exclusive right to manage national relics — making Yang’s project illegal." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

Chinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

"At the farthest end of the Great Wall, Yang Yongfu limps along the section he arduously restored, in effect 'privatising' it and putting himself on a collision course with the authorities. The farmer spent five million yuan ($800,000) and years of backbreaking work renovating several hundred metres of the national symbol deep in northwestern China, turning it into a tourist site. He set up an entrance area for tourists, complete with a car park and fishpond, and his wife Tao Huiping collects the 25 yuan admittance fee at the ticket booth — a table in the open air. A 2006 law gave the government the exclusive right to manage national relics — making Yang’s project illegal." Continue reading

Continue ReadingChinese farmer ‘privatizes’ part of Great Wall to develop new tourist attraction

Botched circumcisions during initiation ritual kill 30 in South Africa

"Botched circumcisions killed 30 young men and landed almost 300 more in hospital during traditional initiation rites in a South African province, the health department said Sunday. The 30 deaths in rural Eastern Cape province occurred during the annual season when young males undergo a rite of passage into manhood. Ten other youths were hospitalised after being rescued from a forest on Sunday. 'The ten initiates’ private parts are rotten. They are badly damaged. Their condition is scary,' said spokesman Sizwe Kupelo. A further 293 young men were undergoing hospital treatment for dehydration, gangrene and septic wounds. Some had lost their genitals." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBotched circumcisions during initiation ritual kill 30 in South Africa

Libyans demand end to violence of rebel militias from 2011 regime change

"Prime Minister Ali Zeidan spoke to reporters of the necessity 'to dissolve the brigades and other formations (of ex-rebels who battled the late Moamer Kadhafi) and integrate them individually into the army and police'. 'In future, no one will bear arms in Libya unless he is in the army or police and is subject to military law… which prevents the taking of political actions,' he said. Libya’s authorities, who are struggling to form a professional army and police, regularly use former rebels to secure the borders or to intervene in tribal conflicts. The government has failed to disarm and disband the former rebel groups who implement the law in parts of the country." Continue reading

Continue ReadingLibyans demand end to violence of rebel militias from 2011 regime change

Thousands of protesters call for Yemen to be broken up

"Thousands of people rallied in south Yemen on Sunday’s 19th anniversary of the civil war that was won by the north to demand secession for the south. 'No union and no federation — no to the occupation!' the crowds chanted in the Hadramawt provincial capital of Mukalla. They waved the flag of the former South Yemen and portraits of Hassan Baoum, head of the Southern Movement’s supreme council. In a statement, the protest organisers reaffirmed their rejection of a UN-backed national dialogue under way in the capital Sanaa, which aims to draft a new constitution and prepare for elections in 2014, after a two-year transition led by President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThousands of protesters call for Yemen to be broken up

Families occupy unfinished homes in Spain

"On the edge of a green field where horses graze, Juana and her neighbours found this mini estate of more than 70 elegantly painted three-bedroom houses, empty and partly plundered. She says about 70 families have moved into the estate in the past three weeks, into houses that are all but finished but lack water and electricity. Like countless projects across Spain, the site was abandoned by property developers when the bank loans dried up in the 2008 financial crisis. Local authorities have remained silent on the status of the site. Unlike many of Spain’s so-called 'ghost towns', life has returned to this one, in the form of local families ruined by the crisis." Continue reading

Continue ReadingFamilies occupy unfinished homes in Spain

Argentina: Give Us Your Real Dollars for Our Fake Dollars

"President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner’s wish of being able to print dollars is coming true as the central bank begins issuing dollar-denominated certificates today that trade in pesos. Argentina is issuing the certificates, known as Cedines, as part of a tax amnesty plan to attract undeclared cash back into the economy. The Cedin 'is an ideal medium for the payment of U.S. dollar obligations,' and can be used for buying products from house appliances to construction materials, according to the law approved by congress May 29, Argentines with undeclared foreign-currency savings have until Sept. 30 to trade their dollars for a certificate of deposit for investment, or Cedin." Continue reading

Continue ReadingArgentina: Give Us Your Real Dollars for Our Fake Dollars